I jabbed them with peroxide
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My tank is 65g loaded mixed reef corals and I've had no trouble with 2 in there so 1 in a 32 should be fine.Would you consider them safe for a 32 gallon tank?
Hey @JoJosReef - Did you ramp the dosage or went straight to 4X recommended?I resorted to treating my entire tank with Flux Rx (fluconazole). The recommended dose is for bryopsis. The dose that works for Valonia is 4x the bryopsis dose, and it is slow. But it works. I understand that it is an antifungal agent that works against an enzyme that is necessary for cell wall synthesis (which micro and macroalgae also need). It causes an arrest of fungal cell growth and, presumably, also causes an arrest of micro/macroalgae cell growth. I believe it is also most effective under bright lights, not bubbles that are hiding in the shadows--I speculate that it has to do with the faster build-up of the molecules that the normally functioning enzymes convert for cell wall synthesis--these molecules are meant to compromise fungal cell wall structures when not converted, so under high light where Valonia would normally grow, it becomes toxic. This is speculation only.
I have noticed that none of my corals or nems (which don't have cell walls because they are animals) or any fish or other inverts (which don't have cell walls either) were negatively effected to the point of death. I did notice a slight change of color in one of my RFAs that returned after ending treatment, but the RFA remained healthy by all appearances. A montipora digitata also seemed to stall in growth during the 6 week treatment. My macroalgae was toast (they have cell walls).
Coraline algae grew at an advanced pace while the bubble algae was dying away, so I assume it was unaffected by the Flux.
Additional notes:
1. I made sure to add an airstone in the AIO chamber to keep oxygen levels up in case there was an adverse effect on oxygenation.
2. I also regularly dosed "beneficial" bacteria in case there was new "real estate" left behind by the dying Valonia for other baddies like Dinos to establish themselves. PNS Probio to be specific.
3. I have ocean live rock in the tank, and I think that helps in many unknown ways.
4. Now I have a few bubbles that appear occasionally that I am staying on top of by manual removal and sucking out with pipette every few days. Like 1-10 bubbles at a time. I assume these are the ones that escaped treatment in the shadows and are looking for new real estate. It's much more manageable than before, knock on wood.
That's my experience. Happy to help if you choose the nuclear option.
Mine loves it! I had a bunch in a frag tank and would harvest it and feed to my ff - he ate so much so fast you could see the outline of the bubbles in his tummy, lol!With my tank I went with a one spot foxface rabbitfish, absolutely demolished the stuff. I think I got lucky though, not all of them do this from what I understand.
Yes, you'll need to address the root cause or any algae will keep coming back... manual removal lets you get it to a manageable level while you correct other things. Running a fuge on an opposite light cycle is the easiest option... you could even grow the bubble algae in iti’ve done that and they always come back
would i be able to put a small ff in my tank to manage the bubble algae while I figure out the root cause and then rehome once too big?Mine loves it! I had a bunch in a frag tank and would harvest it and feed to my ff - he ate so much so fast you could see the outline of the bubbles in his tummy, lol!
I would not recommend this. The really small foxfaces have a much higher mortality rate (in our tanks) and I'm not positive that young ones will eat bubble algae... it may be too big for their mouths.would i be able to put a small ff in my tank to manage the bubble algae while I figure out the root cause and then rehome once too big?
Good thing i asked ahead of timeI would not try this. The really small foxfaces have a much higher mortality rate (in our tanks) and I'm not positive that young ones will eat bubble algae... it may be too big for their mouths.
I'm not the foxface expert. Others may chime in with better advice...Good thing i asked ahead of time
Ive seen some hang on back refugium would this work? my back sump area doesn't have room for anything else really ive already got a protein skimmer in thereYes, you'll need to address the root cause or any algae will keep coming back... manual removal lets you get it to a manageable level while you correct other things. Running a fuge on an opposite light cycle is the easiest option... you could even grow the bubble algae in it
I've had macro growing in an acclimation box inside the tank, lol. I think any natural nutrient export is going to help. A hob fuge can be a great tool.Ive seen some hang on back refugium would this work? my back sump area doesn't have room for anything else really ive already got a protein skimmer in there
Ramped 33% of full dose over three days to monitor and water change if necessary. 6 weeks started from Day 3. Will go straight to 4x if I do it again--hopefully no need.
Says the foxface avatar ;-pI'm not the foxface expert. Others may chime in with better advice...
Lol, yes but I have large tanksSays the foxface avatar ;-p
I will say foxface is hit or miss. when I first added mine he went to town on the bubble algae, but now he is fat and content eating frozen. I am seeing my infestation pop back up againWith my tank I went with a one spot foxface rabbitfish, absolutely demolished the stuff. I think I got lucky though, not all of them do this from what I understand.
I did a full 4x treatment in my 25g lagoon and had no issues with fish or corals and now about 4 weeks later its all gone with just one dose. I have another bottle just in case it ever comes back.
is it a powder? im looking online and thats what i see when i search flux rxI did a full 4x treatment in my 25g lagoon and had no issues with fish or corals and now about 4 weeks later its all gone with just one dose. I have another bottle just in case it ever comes back.
Yes, it is. If you go that route, get Blue Vet Flux Rx for algae (they make one for fish as an antibiotic as well) and that supposedly has better results than the Reef Flux Hd.is it a powder? im looking online and thats what i see when i search flux rx